“Happy to Do It”: Emails Show Current FAA Chief Coordinated With Ex-Lobbyist Colleagues on Policy

As he moved through the agency’s ranks, the now-acting FAA Administrator Dan Elwell exchanged dozens of emails with
lobbyists and other industry players discussing everything from rolling backing back consumer protections to airport privatization.

More than two years ago, the man who is now acting head of the Federal Aviation Administration, Dan Elwell, got a work email
from one of his former lobbyist colleagues. She wanted an update on the airline industry’s push to roll back rules on
mishandled baggage and extra fees, among other Obama-era regulations.

“We are anxious to know when we’ll have a yes or no,” wrote Sharon Pinkerton, the top lobbyist for Airlines
for America, in a Feb. 3, 2017, email.

Elwell, a former airline lobbyist himself who had worked with Pinkerton at Airlines for America, wrote back 31 minutes later.
He said he had “checked with” the Department of Transportation’s top lawyer. “We’ll keep an
eye on them.”

Elwell was working at the time on a secretive deregulation task force. Weeks after the emails, the industry got a yes and
the regulations were nullified.

A month later, Elwell initiated another exchange. He emailed JetBlue executives, asking them for help with “an airport
privatization issue.”

He later asked if the airline had “any luck finding a JetBlue exec we can throw to the lions, er, I mean, introduce
to a nice reporter to say nice things about airport privatization?”

JetBlue, the airline lobbyist and the FAA then coordinated on talking points for a story about privatizing management of St.
Louis Lambert International Airport.

ELWELL ASKS JETBLUE IF THEY HAVE AN EXEC 'WE CAN THROW TO THE LIONS' (p. 24)

Political appointees typically aren’t allowed to participate in issues that involve their former employer or clients
they have worked for, as part of President Donald Trump’s ethics rules. But the rules did not apply to Elwell during
his first few months at the FAA when he worked on the deregulatory team.

He had been classified as a kind of government consultant — a “special-government employee” — who
isn’t bound by the ethics rules.

In a statement, the FAA said that Elwell “has no reportable conflicts of interest” and, as a special-government
employee, “he was subjected to and complied with the same, stringent requirements and was engaged in no activities that
posed a conflict of interest.” (Read the agency’s full statement.)

Airlines for America said in a statement: “As the voice of the U.S. airline industry, we wouldn’t be doing our
jobs if we didn’t interact with certain regulatory and legislative agencies that work regularly with the carriers we
represent. It is our responsibility to educate and communicate with organizations that work to make this the safest aviation
system in the world.”

Elwell’s designation as a special-government employee also allowed him to continue his private consulting business even
as he worked for the government. It’s unclear if Elwell did that. Virginia state records show his business was still
incorporated through April of last year, but his financial disclosures don’t list any private income while he was in
government.

What is clear is that Elwell continued strategizing with his former lobbyist colleagues even after he was no longer a special-government
employee and rose up to the top ranks of the agency.

Elwell was named the FAA’s deputy administrator in June 2017. A month later, Pinkerton emailed Elwell, asking him to
“weigh in on directly” on compliance issues contained in the FAA’s five-year funding bill.

Elwell wrote back that he would be “Happy to do it,” and he asked a subordinate to help “set it up.”

ELWELL TELLS AIRPORTS FOR AMERICA HE IS 'HAPPY' TO HELP THEIR LEGISLATIVE PUSH (p. 134)

The emails offer a detailed picture of the tight connections between the airline industry and the government, while the FAA
is facing increased scrutiny over its oversight after two crashes of the Boeing’s 737 Max.

“These emails underline why there’s a prohibition on private communications between new federal officials and
old lobbying clients,” said Kathleen Clark, a government ethics expert and law professor at Washington University in
St. Louis. “The tone, the clubbiness.

The issue is that the inside group appears to be not the flying public. The inside group appears to be the airlines.”

Unlike most other oversight agencies, the FAA has a dual mission to both regulate and promote the airline industry, a combination
that many observers have criticized as an inherent conflict.

Elwell is scheduled to testify Wednesday afternoon at a Senate committee hearing on airline safety. The emails were provided
to ProPublica by the nonprofit Democracy Forward Foundation, which obtained them following a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit
last year with the Transportation Department.

Elwell began his career as a military pilot before spending 16 years flying for American Airlines. After stints on Capitol
Hill and at the FAA during the George W. Bush administration, Elwell worked for two industry groups, including at Airlines
for America. He started his own firm, Elwell & Associates, in 2015.

Elwell’s federal financial disclosure list his earnings at his consulting firm as $282,500 in 2016 and 2017 combined.
It’s not clear who paid him. His federal financial disclosure forms do not identify individual clients, though doing
so is required by law.

“That’s garbage,” said Clark, the ethics expert. “The rules are clear. He should have reported those.”

The FAA did not respond to questions about the omissions. The disclosure estimates his net worth at between $2.1 million and
$7.8 million.

ELWELL DID NOT DISCLOSE CONSULTING CLIENTS (p. 5)

After Elwell arrived back at the FAA under Trump, his wide-ranging email discussions with industry players included a push
by lobbyists to intervene in government research.

In May 2017, the FAA’s assistant administrator for government and industry affairs, Katherine Howard, asked two of her
government colleagues about the number of communities that had lost air service since deregulation. After wondering whether
airlines might have the data, someone forwarded the email to Pinkerton, the airlines lobbyist.

Pinkerton forwarded the email chain to another Transportation Department official, Geoff Burr, who is also a former lobbyist,
writing: “I share this with you as I believe we have a problem with the folks at the bottom of the chain...I’m
a bit skeptical about why these chicas are urgently trying to answer this question.” Pinkerton seemed to referencing
Howard and her two, female colleagues.

PINKERTON TELLS FAA 'WE HAVE A PROBLEM' WITH FAA STAFFERS' RESEARCH (p. 4)

Elwell was then looped in and said he would look into it. (Elwell, Pinkerton and Burr did not respond to questions about the
exchange.)

The emails also show Elwell’s admiration for industry players during some of their more challenging moments. He chimed
in after United was forced to apologize in the wake of a viral video showing a passenger being physically dragged from a flight
to make room for the airline’s own employees.

In an exchange with a United official following the confidential settlement between the airline and the passenger, Elwell
wrote: “Looks like you guys have really taken leadership on this.”

“Crossing my fingers for a denied boarding flight. ,” he continued, an apparent reference to the
kicked-off passenger getting a settlement.

ELWELL JOKES WITH UNITED OFFICIAL ABOUT APRIL 2017 PASSENGER SETTLEMENT (p. 299)

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Devious Director Daniel K. Elwell FAA-Federal Arrogance Administration-and his comrades have imposed their corrupt and unscrupulous
business practices on citizens and communities throughout the country. They are a rogue organization, which does not respond
to community outreach. They do not seem to have to answer to a higher authority in the State or Federal Government.